Posts Tagged ‘venture capitalists’

Four-time Entrepreneur Shares His Thoughts on How to Build a Successful Company

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“If you have the right folks in the right position, you can overcome most any obstacle so long as your business plan is sound.  Most of the big problems are the result of either having the wrong folks or having them in the wrong spot.  My biggest mistakes were not letting the wrong folks go soon enough.”  Gregg Freishtat, Serial Entrepreneur, Founder of four companies and Current CEO & Chairman of Vertical Acuity

The Rich Niche Group blog interviews and enables you to hear directly from successful entrepreneurs and product managers about the steps they took to grow their businesses/products and how they were able to create, penetrate, and/or dominate their niche.  This week we interview Gregg Freishtat, the founder of four different start-ups and board member and advisor to several venture capitalist and venture-backed companies.

Why Selected:  Gregg is a four-time entrepreneur and has successfully sold three software companies over the past 10 years – Telet Communications sold to PGI in 1996, VerticalOne sold to S1 in 1999 and Proficient Systems – sold to LPSN in 2006. Gregg serves on many private company and philanthropic boards including: SONE; MarketWorks; Relevant Knowledge; Outweb; Proficient Systems; VerticalOne; Telet Communications; JDRF; and the Jewish Federation.

I had the pleasure of working with Gregg back in the late 1990’s and have always been impressed with his ability to grasp the power of new technologies, the impact they can have on the business world, and his ability to build a business around that technology.  Just as important, Gregg makes those around him better at what they do and always makes working together fun and enjoyable.

In the following interview, Gregg takes us through how he was able to build off the success of each of his start-ups and what he learned along the way.  During the interview, Gregg points out what he believes other entrepreneurs can do to help position themselves and their companies for success.  The key points you’ll take away include:

  1. Maintain the flexibility to adjust (morph) your business based on customer/prospect needs. 
  2. When evangelizing your business remember, “Big vision for investors; Simple and safe for customers.
  3. One of the biggest keys to success and potential obstacle are: People, people, people!
  4. Establish your culture early and don’t do business with or for people you don’t like. 

  

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Entrepreneur & Author Talks About How to Maximize Profits via a Positive Customer Experience

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Most services have little impact – if you can push the client to use the results you go beyond the standard company that moves onto the next customer and seldom looks back.

 John Goodman, Co-Founder & Vice Chairman of TARP Worldwide and Author

The Rich Niche Group blog interviews and enables you to hear directly from successful entrepreneurs, product managers, venture capitalists and others about the steps they took to grow their businesses/products and how they were able to create, penetrate, and/or dominate their niche.  This week we interview John Goodman.

Interviewee:  John Goodman, Vice Chairman and co-founder of TARP World­wide

Why Selected: As a pioneer in the science of quantifying, managing, and optimizing the customer experience, John (and his company TARP Worldwide) gives us the opportunity to glean a little bit of his knowledge on how a start-up, small business or any business can perfect their customer’s experience.  It is not often we have the chance to hear from someone running a company referred to by renowned author and consultant Tom Peters as “(TARP is) perhaps America’s premier customer service research firm.”  John is also an author, and in his new book Strategic Customer Service: Managing the Customer Experience to Increase Positive Word of Mouth, Build Loyalty and Maximize Profits, he shows how successful companies use customer service as a “catalyst,…making the organization more proactive, accelerating responsiveness, and boosting its effectiveness.”  John also points out the financial impact good and/or bad/no customer service can have on an organization.

In the following interview, John takes us through how TARP got started and how the importance of moving customer service from a complaint department to one that can have a positive financial impact on your organization.  The key points you’ll take away include:

1.  The impact of great service on your financials is ten to twenty times the cost. 

2.  Many companies that hire a market research firm to conduct a study read their final reports then put them up on a shelf.  Find ways to make sure your clients use information and the advantages you bring to them.  This will lead to repeat business.

3.  When clients and prospects want to negotiate on price make sure you take out work/services/product accordinglyJust reducing prices can lessen the perceived value of your offering. 

4.  In order to gain traction in a market dominated by one or few companies , look for ways you can out innovate them and find the one or two people at some of their clients who are the most unhappy and then deliver outstanding service to them.

 

 

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Dharmesh Shah, HubSpot founder, entrepreneur & author shares his wisdom on starting & growing a business

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One of the common mistakes that marketers make is to believe that their customers are different than they are.  They’re not.  Just like us, our prospects hate cold calls, throw away junk mail, and ignore most advertising. 

Dharmesh Shah, Founder & CTO of HubSpot, Serial Software Entrepreneur and Startup Blogger 

The Rich Niche Group blog interviews and enables you to hear directly from successful entrepreneurs, product managers, venture capitalists and others about the steps they took to grow their businesses/products and how they were able to create, penetrate, and/or dominate their niche.  This week we interview Dharmesh Shah.

Interviewee:  Dharmesh Shah, serial entrepreneur, author and startup blogger. 

Why Selected:  Dharmesh is the founder and CTO of HubSpot.  HubSpot provides marketing software for small businesses.  The company, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has raised over $30 million in venture capital, and has over 1,700 customers. 

He developed grader.com – a free suite of online tools for marketing measurement.  These tools, including WebsiteGrader.com and TwitterGrader.com have won numerous awards and have been used by millions.

Dharmesh is the co-author of the new book “Inbound Marketing: Get Found Using Google, Social Media, and Blogs,” published by Wiley in October, 2009.  The book has been consistently ranked in the top 100 business books on Amazon.

He also authors OnStartups.com, a top-ranking startup blog with over 15,000 subscribers and 100,000 members in its online community.  He is an active member of the Boston area entrepreneurial community and a frequent speaker on the topic of startups and internet marketing.

Dharmesh has a B.S. in Computer Science from UAB and an M.S. in the Management of Technology from MIT.

In the following interview, Dharmesh discusses how he used inbound marketing techniques to help his company’s grow and how any business regardless of the sector it is in can use these same techniques to reach its customer base.  During the interview, Dharmesh provided some great insights on what it takes to launch, grow and sustain a company in today’s market.  The key points you’ll take away include:

  1. It is critical for entrepreneurs to figure out a way to efficiently gain access to customers and to really reach people, you need to give them something that is valuable and compelling. 
  2. As your company grows, one of the challenges you needed to be prepared for is how to stay on top of rapid growth and ensure that the organization shares a common vision and maintains the culture that has made it successful thus far.
  3. Successful companies that enter a niche have a good understanding of how the existing players are failing to deliver sufficient customer value.
  4. Companies that dominate a niche find some sort of “network effect” whereby each additional customer adds value to the remaining ones.

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